The Los Angeles federal court jury deliberated for just under four hours before finding the accuser hadn't proven her claim that Rose, 28, and two friends gang raped her while she was drunk or drugged in her central California apartment in 2013.

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Rose showed no emotion as the verdict was read, and just shook his lawyer's hand.

Judge Michael Fitzgerald wished the accuser well, and then turned to the hoops star. "Mr. Rose, my best wishes to you and your career — except when the Knicks play the Lakers," he quipped.

One of the jurors, who only gave her name as Jennifer, insisted there was nothing nefarious about the selfie — she just wanted a memento from what was "a fascinating experience."

The accuser filed her blockbuster lawsuit last year, claiming the men drank tequila with her and possibly drugged her at a Beverly Hills rental home on Aug. 26, 2013, and then let themselves into her apartment a few hours later to gang rape her while she was drifting in and out of consciousness, unable to consent.

New York Knicks basketball player Derrick Rose arrives at U.S. District Court in downtown Los Angeles on Thursday, Oct. 6, 2016. (Damian Dovarganes/AP)

Rose and his co-defendants, Randall Hampton and Ryan Allen, acknowledged having had sex with the woman, but maintained it was consensual.

Rose, who missed the bulk of the NBA preseason to attend the trial, declined comment afterwards, except to say, "I'm focused on the season." In a prepared statement, he said, "I am thankful that the jury understood and agreed with me ... I am ready to put this behind me and focus on my family and career."

"We're very happy the system worked," said his lawyer, Mark Baute. "All three men were innocent from day one."

The lawyer for the accuser said she was "devastated" by the verdict, and they're weighing an appeal.

"It's a shame for this country that a celebrity can come to court and slut-shame a plaintiff," said the lawyer, Waukeen McCoy.

He'd told jurors the trio were "sexual deviants" who preyed upon his client.

In his closing argument Tuesday, Baute said the woman welcomed the men into her bed with "open arms and open legs."

Jurors were more diplomatic — they just said the accuser wasn't able to prove her case.

"I don't want to call her a liar. I don't want to call her anything. I just didn't feel like there was enough evidence," said the jury forewoman, who gave her name as Janet. "There just wasn't enough."

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A male juror said, "It felt like she was playing us."

"At the beginning I was on her side 100%, and as it went on, I went to the other side," he said.

There were clear problems with the 30-year-old woman's case — she filed suit two years after the incident, before ever going to police, and didn't have any physical evidence.

Derrick Rose #25 of the New York Knicks takes the basketball up the court during their game against the Houston Rockets at the Toyota Center on Oct. 4, 2016 in Houston, Tex. (Scott Halleran/Getty Images)

The defense also highlighted racy text messages that contradicted parts of her story, and a former friend of the woman's testified she was just after Rose's money.

With no physical evidence in the case, the jury was left to make its decision based on often-lurid testimony and a series of text messages produced by the woman.

Rose testified the woman sent him sexually suggestive texts the morning of Aug. 26, 2013, engaged in sexual activity with him at the Beverly Hills house, invited him back to her apartment in text messages and then soberly led him and his two friends into her apartment and explicitly told them to take turns.

"If someone tells you come in one at a time, and you're a guy, what is that?" Rose testified.

He said his accuser "grabbed" him when he entered her bedroom and initiated the sex that ended with him stowing his used condom in his pocket.

"In my profession, they teach us right when we enter the NBA, if you can't flush it, take your condom with you," he said.

Derrick Rose posed with jurors following the verdict in his trial on October 19, 2016. (Obtained by New York Daily News)

The woman, meanwhile was grilled over text messages she sent to Rose before arriving at his house, especially one in which she claimed to be buying a sex belt at a "girls on girls" store.

She said she fabricated the story because she previously received the belt with handles on the sides as swag at an event and wanted Rose to think it was new.